Mobile phones are enhancing the lives of internally displaced people in Nigeria.
Soldiers gesture while standing on guard during Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari’s visit to the Maimalari Barracks in Maiduguri on June 17, 2021.
Photo by Audu Marte/AFP via Getty Images
The atrocities and motivation of bandits have assumed insurgent-type criminality. But the Nigerian government is reluctant to label them terrorists or insurgents.
A group of Niger soldiers on patrol
Boureima Hama/AFP via Getty Images
Resolving jihadist conflicts in the Sahel requires treating jihadists not as terrorists only but also as political actors who seek to provide an alternative form of governance to the status quo.
A less militarised approach could lead to greater security in the region.
Daphne Benoit/AFP via Getty Images
Intervention in Cabo Delgado is a potentially dangerous move with far-reaching consequences for SADC if its efforts fail, or it becomes a protracted intervention.
Soldiers patrol the Nigerian border with Niger Republic as both countries battle the Boko Haram insurgency.
Photo by Giles Clarke/Getty Images
Islamic State West Africa Province appears to be consolidating its dominance in the region. This means Nigeria and other countries in the Sahel region have a lot more to be worried about.
After George Floyd’s death at the hands of police in Minneapolis, Minn., protestors all over the United States, including in Los Angeles, pictured here on May 30, 2020, demonstrated against police brutality.
(Shutterstock)
The continued killings of Black people at the hands of the police in the United States has contributed to an environment of continued marginalization and oppression.
Nigerian security personnel inspect the site of a blast at Nyanya bus station in the outskirts of Abuja
Stringer/AFP via Getty Images
Due to the poor security response of the Nigerian state, insurgency will continue to pose a serious threat to its northeast border communities.
Taliban militants and Afghan civilians celebrate the signing of a peace deal with the United States on March 2.
Noorullah Shirzada/AFP via Getty Images)
Because the Taliban’s insurgency is so well financed, the Afghan government must spend enormous sums on war, too. A peace accord would free up funds for basic services, economic development and more.
A Nigerian Navy unit on patrol, looking for illegal oil refineries in the Niger Delta region near Port Harcourt.
Stefan Heunis/AFP via Getty Image
Although COVID-19 measures have had a negative impact on food supply in Nigeria, there are other factors responsible for the dramatic rise in food prices.
A board for the Prussian wargame of ‘Kriegsspiel.’
Matthew Kirschenbaum/Wikimedia Commons
David Banks, American University School of International Service
War games let you test your political and military acumen right at your kitchen table – while also helping you appreciate how decision-makers are limited by the choices of others.
A global survey claims South Africans don’t trust their police.
EPA/Nic Bothma
The Law and Order Index says South Africans feel less secure than people in Yemen, the DRC and Libya, countries all affected by violent conflict.
Women carry goods across a makeshift bridge in the Ilaje slum in Lagos. Widening inequality is fuelling tensions across Nigeria.
Reuters/Finbarr O'Reilly
Protests are raising tensions in Africa’s most populous country, with agitators and federal troops clashing on the streets. But is Nigeria on the brink of another civil war?
Leader of Fulani herdsmen Haruna Usman pictured by Reuters in 2014.
Reuters/Afolabi Sotunde
Attacks by Fulani herdsmen on communities in West Africa are increasing in number and in sophistication. Regional and national authorities must respond promptly to arrest the threat.
Local vigilantes patrol communities in north east Nigeria to repel attacks by Boko Haram militants.
EPA/Stringer